I think this is happening repetitively to me. Sometimes I ask a question that asks how to do:
- Something that is not actually supported by the API I use, but is not explicitly stated anywhere
- Something about outdated compilers, libraries that I cannot replace but need to solve the problem
Of course, this is not intentional, I ask because I don't know the problem cannot be solved or is much much more complicated than I thought. Even if I include all resources I have, such as code sample, relevant links to documentation I have read, errors, ideone MCVE, even after all that, downvotes are guaranteed.
I will now narrow this post to my last question, which turned out as a missing feature in compiler. It is not clear though, whether it's missing or broken and whether there's any workaround:
In the question, I have included:
- Full error report
- All relevant code that can be easily pasted and tested (and people claim to successfully do so)
- Ideone sample of the code, which clearly compiles under the new compiler
- Info about what compiler I'm using
- Info about what I tried to do with the code to fix this
I received two downvotes out of 8 visits. Also, someone posted close vote:
Questions seeking debugging help ("why isn't this code working?") must include the desired behavior, a specific problem or error and the shortest code necessary to reproduce it in the question itself.
I received zero comments asking for improvement of anything specific in the post.
After spending 20 minutes to assemble question about that's enough to make me angry. The close vote specifically seems like someone was incompetent to read/understand the question.
Is my post as valid as I think it is? If it's not why? Othervise, how can I prevent people from downvoting a valid post?
Note that this is not standalone case, but it's significant because after previous experience, I tried to post in even higher quality. Also, older posts like this eventually attract upvotes from people who google them and are trying to do the same thing.